Lost and Found in Russia

 
Previous page Next page
  Communicating for Development
- Human Change for Survival
AUTHOR:  Colin Fraser  Sonia Restrepo-Estrada 

Arguing that widespread changes in human attitudes and behaviour are vital to ensure a secure sustainable future, this book focuses on the use of communication processes for facilitating those changes. Through accounts and analysis of specific projects across four continents, the authors set out to show how communication has been used to mobilize societies, to facilitate democratic participation, and to help people to acquire new knowledge and skills. Among the activities described and explored are the successful worldwide mobilization of all levels of society for child immunization, the role of communication in facilitating recent, rapid advances in family planning in many countries, education through entertainment, and the use of radio and video to enable peasant farmers to be protagonists in their own development. The authors make proposals for how, in this widely neglected area, communication strategies, techniques and media resources might be systematically harnessed to help societies to adapt and develop in the 21st century.

SUBJECT CLASSIFICATION(S):
Click below for a list of recent titles on:

Development studies
Information theory
Political science & theory
Sociology, social studies

Search inside this book:
Google Book Search

 

 

Book Information Service

Add this title to your shopping basket
Buy this book right now...
Check the contents of your basket.
Check or modify account details.

See larger image

Email a friend Email this page to a friend


AVAILABILITY:
Temporarily unavailable

PRICE:
£15.99

COVER:
Paperback  

PAGES:
256  

PAGE SIZE:
216 x 135 x 22 mm  

ISBN:
9781860642388

PUBLICATION DATE
31 Dec 1998  
 

 
Previous page Next page

« Home | Search For Books | Special Offers | What's New | How To Publish | How To Order | Free Catalogue | Inspection Copies | New Book Alerts | About Us | Contact Us | Careers »

© I.B.Tauris & Co Ltd 1999-2008 and © Ehaus Ltd. 2008